[So far, the rich man's _cattle_ has been eating the poor man's food.
 Tomorrow, the rich man's _SUV_ will eat (guzzle) it.  --Chris]


http://www.counterpunch.org/tokar11012006.html


Running on Hype

The Real Scoop on Biofuels

   By BRIAN TOKAR

You can hardly open up a major newspaper or national magazine these
days without encountering the latest hype about biofuels, and how
they're going to save oil, reduce pollution and prevent climate
change. Bill Gates, Sun Microsystems' Vinod Khosla, and other major
venture capitalists are investing millions in new biofuel production,
whether in the form of ethanol, mainly derived from corn in the US
today, or biodiesel, mainly from soybeans and canola seed. It's
literally a "modern day gold rush," as described by the New York
Times, paraphrasing the chief executive of Cargill, one of the main
benefactors of increased subsidies to agribusiness and tax credits to
refiners for the purpose of encouraging biofuel production.

The Times reported earlier this year that some 40 new ethanol plants
are currently under construction in the US, aiming toward a 30
percent increase in domestic production. Archer Daniels Midland, the
company that first sold the idea of corn-derived ethanol as an auto
fuel to Congress in the late 1970s, has doubled its stock price and
profits over the last two years. ADM currently controls a quarter of
US ethanol fuel production, and recently hired a former Chevron
executive as its CEO.

Several well-respected analysts have raised serious concerns about
this rapid diversion of food crops toward the production of fuel for
automobiles. WorldWatch Institute founder Lester Brown, long
concerned about the sustainability of world food supplies, says that
fuel producers are already competing with food processors in the
world's grain markets. "Cars, not people, will claim most of the
increase in grain production this year," reports Brown, a serious
concern in a world where the grain required to make enough ethanol to
fill an SUV tank is enough to feed a person for a whole year. Others
have dismissed the ethanol gold rush as nothing more than the
subsidized burning of food to run automobiles.

The biofuel rush is having a significant impact worldwide as well.
Brazil, often touted as the the most impressive biofuel success
story, is using half its annual sugarcane crop to provide 40 percent
of its auto fuel, while increasing deforestation to grow more
sugarcane and soybeans. Malaysian and Indonesian rainforests are
being bulldozed for oil palm plantations-threatening endangered
orangutans, rhinos, tigers and countless other species-in order to
serve at the booming European market for biodiesel.

The Minnesota researchers attempted a full lifecycle analysis of the
production of ethanol from corn and biodiesel from soy. They
documented the energy costs of fuel production, pesticide use,
transportation, and other key factors, and also accounted for the
energy equivalent of soy and corn byproducts that remain for other
uses after the fuel is extracted. Their paper, published in the July
25th edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences,
concluded that ethanol production offers a modest net energy gain of
25%, resulting in 12% less greenhouse gases than an equivalent amount
of gasoline. The numbers for biodiesel are more promising, with a 93%
net energy gain and a 41% reduction in greenhouse gases.

The researchers cautioned, however, that these figures do not account
for the significant environmental damage from increased acreages of
these crops, including the impacts of pesticides, nitrate runoff into
water supplies, nor the increased demand on water, as "energy crops"
like corn and soy begin to displace more drought tolerant crops such
as wheat in several Midwestern states.

The most serious impact, though, is on land use. The Minnesota paper
reports that in 2005, 14% of the US corn harvest was used to produce
some 6 million gallons of ethanol, equivalent to 1.7% of current
gasoline usage. About 1 1/2 percent of the soy harvest produced 120
million gallons of biodiesel, equivalent to less than one tenth of
one percent of gas usage. This means that if all of the country's
corn harvest was used to make ethanol, it would displace 12% of our
gas; all of our soybeans would displace about 6% of the gas. But if
the energy used in producing these biofuels is taken into account the
fact that 80% of the energy goes into production in the case of corn
ethanol, and almost 50% in the case of soy biodiesel, the entire soy
and corn crops combined would only satisfy 5.3% of current fuel
needs. This is where the serious strain on food supplies and prices
originates.

The Cornell study is even more skeptical. Released in July, it was
the product of an ongoing collaboration between Cornell
agriculturalist David Pimentel, environmental engineer Ted Patzek,
and their colleagues at the University of California at Berkeley, and
was published in the journal Natural Resources Research. This study
found that, in balance, making ethanol from corn requires 29% more
fossil fuel than the net energy produced and biodisel from soy
results in a net energy loss of 27%. Other crops, touted as solutions
to the apparent diseconomy of current methods, offer even worse
results.

Switchgrass, for example, can grow on marginal land and presumably
won't compete with food production (you may recall George Bush's
mumbling about switchgrass in his 2006 State of the Union speech),
but it requires 45% more energy to harvest and process than the
energy value of the fuel that is produced. Wood biomass requires 57%
more energy than it produces, and sunflowers require more than twice
as much energy than is available in the fuel that is produced. "There
is just no energy benefit to using plant biomass for liquid fuel,"
said David Pimentel in a Cornell press statement this past July.
"These strategies are not sustainable." In a recent article, Harvard
environmental scientist Michael McElroy concurred: "[U]nfortunately
the promised benefits [of ethanol] prove upon analysis to be largely
ephemeral."

Even Brazilian sugarcane, touted as the world's model for conversion
from fossil fuels to sustainable "green energy," has its downside.
The energy yield appears beyond question: it is claimed that ethanol
from sugarcane may produce as much as 8 times as much energy as it
takes to grow and process. But a recent World Wildlife Fund report
for the International Energy Agency raises serious questions about
this approach to future energy independence. It turns out that 80% of
Brazil's greenhouse gas emissions come not from cars, but from
deforestation-the loss of embedded carbon dioxide when forests are
cut down and burned. A hectare of land may save 13 tons of carbon
dioxide if it is used to grow sugarcane, but the same hectare can
absorb 20 tons of CO2 if it remains forested. If sugarcane and soy
plantations continue to encourage deforestation, both in the Amazon
and in Brazil's Atlantic coastal forests, any climate advantage is
more than outweighed by the loss of the forest.

Genetic engineering, which has utterly failed to produce healthier or
more sustainable food-and also failed to create a reliable source of
biopharmaceuticals without threatening the safety of our food
supply-is now being touted as the answer to sustainable biofuel
production. Biofuels were all the buzz at the biotech industry's most
recent biotech mega-convention (April 2006), and biotech companies
are all competing to cash in on the biofuel bonanza. Syngenta (the
world's largest herbicide manufacturer and number three, after
Monsanto and DuPont, in seeds) is developing a GE corn variety that
contains one of the enzymes needed to convert corn starch into sugar
before it can be fermented into ethanol. Companies are vying to
increase total starch content, reduce lignin (necessary for the
structural integrity of plants but a nuisance for chemical
processors), and increase crop yields. Others are proposing huge
plantations of fast-growing genetically engineered low-lignin trees
to temporarily sequester carbon and ultimately be harvested for
ethanol.

However, the utility of incorporating the amylase enzyme into crops
is questionable (it's also a potential allergen), gains in starch
production are marginal, and the use of genetic engineering to
increase crop yields has never proved reliable. Other, more complex
traits, such as drought and salt tolerance (to grow energy crops on
land unsuited to food production), have been aggressively pursued by
geneticists for more than twenty years with scarcely a glimmer of
success. Genetically engineered trees, with their long life-cycle, as
well as seeds and pollen capable of spreading hundreds of miles in
the wild, are potentially a far greater environmental threat than
engineered varieties of annual crops. Even Monsanto, always the most
aggressive promoter of genetic engineering, has opted to rely on
conventional plant breeding for its biofuel research, according to
the New York Times. Like "feeding the world" and biopharmaceutical
production before it, genetic engineering for biofuels mainly
benefits the biotech industry's public relations image.

Biofuels may still prove advantageous in some local applications,
such as farmers using crop wastes to fuel their farms, and running
cars from waste oil that is otherwise thrown away by restaurants. But
as a solution to long-term energy needs on a national or
international scale, the costs appear to far outweigh the benefits.
The solution lies in technologies and lifestyle changes that can
significantly reduce energy use and consumption, something energy
analysts like Amory Lovins have been advocating for some thirty
years. From the 1970s through the '90s, the US economy significantly
decreased its energy intensity, steadily lowering the amount of
energy required to produce a typical dollar of GDP. Other industrial
countries have gone far beyond us in this respect. But no one has
figured out how to make a fortune on conservation and efficiency. The
latest biofuel hype once again affirms that the needs of the planet,
and of a genuinely sustainable society, are in fundamental conflict
with the demands of wealth and profit.

Brian Tokar directs the Biotechnology Project at Vermont's Institute
for Social Ecology (social-ecology.org), and has edited two books on
the science and politics of genetic engineering, Redesigning Life?
(Zed Books, 2001) and Gene Traders: Biotechnology, World Trade and
the Globalization of Hunger (Toward Freedom, 2004).



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